Recombinant StAR (Steroidogenic Acute Regulator) (Leydig Cell Marker) Antibody, Clone: [MSVA-740R], Rabbit, Monoclonal

Catalog Number: NBT-6770-RBM14-P1
Article Name: Recombinant StAR (Steroidogenic Acute Regulator) (Leydig Cell Marker) Antibody, Clone: [MSVA-740R], Rabbit, Monoclonal
Biozol Catalog Number: NBT-6770-RBM14-P1
Supplier Catalog Number: 6770-RBM14-P1
Alternative Catalog Number: NBT-6770-RBM14-P1-100
Manufacturer: NeoBiotechnologies
Host: Rabbit
Category: Antikörper
Application: IHC
Species Reactivity: Human
Immunogen: Recombinant fragment (around aa 39-108) of human STAR protein (exact sequence is proprietary)
Alternative Names: Cholesterol trafficker, Luteinizing hormone induced protein, Mitochondrial steroid acute regulatory protein, StAR, StAR related lipid transfer (START) domain containing 1, StARD1, START domain-containing protein 1, Steroid acute regulatory protein, Steroidogenic acute regulator (STAR), Steroidogenic acute regulatory protein mitochondrial
Steroidogenic Acute Regulatory Protein (STAR) controls the rate-limiting step of steroidegenesis by translocating cholesterol from the outer mitochondrial membrane to the inner membrane where it is later cleaved to pregnenolone.It is primarily present in steroid-producing cells, including Leydig cells in the testis, theca cells and luteal cells in the ovary and adrenal cells in the adrenal cortex. Due to low levels of pregnenolone, seminomas and Leydig cell tumors display no specific STAR staining. Therefore, STAR antibody may assist in differentiating sex cord stromal tumors (SCST), seminomas and embryonal carcinomas.
Clonality: Monoclonal
Clone Designation: [MSVA-740R]
Molecular Weight: 30kDa
NCBI: 6770
UniProt: P49675
Form: Ab produced in HEK293 cell mammalian-based expression system. Prepared in 10mM PBS with 0.05% BSA & 0.05% azide. Also available WITHOUT BSA & azide.
Steroidogenic acute regulatory protein, mitochondrial Rabbit Recombinant Monoclonal Antibody (MSVA-740R) tested on many normal and cancer tissues. The immunohistochemistry staining in these tissues aligns with the expression data in Human Protein Atlas.